BACKGROUNDWater heaters are well known to consume vast amounts of energy to heat cold water to make it hot for human use in washing and cleaning, and for industrial processes. The resulting hot drainwater (also referred to as wastewater) flows freely to the sewer taking with it all of that heat energy. Generation of energy to heat water releases pollutants including those that cause global warming.[0002]
Although it would seem obvious to use heat in drainwater to heat new cold water, thereby reducing energy use and saving money, this seemingly simple heat transfer idea has resisted successful solution in spite of many inventors having tried over a very long time.[0003]
It is, therefore, the objective of the present invention to provide a heat exchanger apparatus to remove heat from flowing drainwater, to store that heat within that apparatus, and to limit heat loss of that stored heat to cold drainwater that may flow thereafter.[0004]
Another objective is to cool drinking water using cold drainwater.[0005]
DESCRIPTIONBy way of review, the water heater in a building has a continuous cold water pressure feed to it. When a hot water faucet or valve (hereinafter referred to as ‘valve’) is opened, the flow of hot water at the valve reduces pressure and allows cold water to instantaneously flow into the water heater, displacing the hot water out of the valve. Thus when hot water is used, cold water flows at exactly the same time and at exactly the same rate of flow.[0006]
Drainwater heat recovery involves removing heat from hotter drainwater (cooling it) and transferring the heat to the fresh cold water (warming it). This saves energy and money since no new energy is required.[0007]
U.S. Pat. No. 4,619,311, to Vasile, describes a drainwater heat recovery system comprising a copper drainpipe heat exchanger whose exterior is wrapped with a copper coil heat exchanger through which passes cold water to be pre-heated. This type of tube-on-tube heat exchanger has been long-available, such as that sold by the Solar Research in Brighton, Mich. 48116, as part number 5832. These devices use conductive heat transfer which is necessarily a two-way process because the two heat exchangers are in direct physical contact. U.S. Pat. No. 4,619,311, to Vasile is a simple, low-cost, easy-to-install heat exchanger. However, it transfers heat only when both drainwater and cold water are flowing simultaneously therethrough. This special flow condition, referred to as ‘continuous use’, occurs when showering.[0008]
However the other major use of hot water in a building, referred to as ‘batch use’, occurs when appliances or fixtures, such as a washing machines or sinks, fill with hot water, operate, and then, later, drain. In more detail, in batch use, when filling with hot water, cold water is flowing through the heat exchanger but there is no drainwater flow, so no heat is transferred with tube-on-tube heat exchanger and the cold water is not warmed before it enters the water heater. Then, when the wash machine drains, there is hot drainwater flow but no cold water flow (there being no hot water being used at that time) and so, again, no heat is transferred and the hot drainwater leaves the building uncooled.[0009]
The reason tube-on-tube heat exchangers do not work under batch hot water use is that their only heat storage is the exterior cold water coil which will transfer it's heat back to a cold drainwater flow. Lacking heat storage means that tube-on-tube heat exchanger can only recover heat from approximately half of the total drainwater available for heat recovery. This limits cost effectiveness of this important energy conservation device. A seemingly obvious solution to this is to enclose the entire heat exchanger in a reservoir of water to store heat. However, cold drainwater would again simple cool the reservoir by conductive heat transfer with no net gain.[0010]
Further, U.S. Pat. No. 4,619,311, to Vasile is not recommended for horizontal drainpipe applications, as found in a great many buildings with no basement, because the design requires a generally circular drainpipe upon which to wind the outer coil. Further the design cannot have exterior wall finning on the drainwater heat exchanger also due to the outer coil being wrapped against the exterior wall. This severely limits heat transfer and so cost effectiveness. Moreover this design cannot use twisted tube for the drainwater heat exchanger which may add useful heat transfer.[0011]
U.S. Pat. No. 5,736,059 to the present applicant, does teach of a drainwater heat recovery system with no-loss heat storage. However, for low volume hot water users, such as in homes, the system tends to be too large and, with its numerous components, too expensive. Further, its installation is essentially limited to vertical drainpipes unless mechanical pumping is added.[0012]
The object of the present invention is to provide a drainwater heat exchanger which solves all of the aforementioned problems by providing no-loss heat storage and low cost construction/installation.[0013]
A review of the physical principles involved in the present invention follows.[0014]
Firstly, heat is transferred by conduction, convection, and radiation. When a fluid such as water is adjacent a surface which is heated or cooled, heat is conducted to or from the water.[0015]
Secondly, when a fluid such as a body of water is heated or cooled, its density changes. When heat is added or removed at a particular region in a body of water the water adjacent the hotter or colder surface becomes more more less heavy, dense, or buoyant, compared to adjacent water. This added buoyancy causes the water to move vertically by convection whereupon the temperature affected water will convect to a vertical position within the body of water where it becomes a horizontal layer or stratum parallel to all other strata and parallel to the earth's surface. The hotter water will occupy the highest stratum and the coldest water will occupy the lowest stratum with all other strata in between being determined by relative temperature. This stratification is a natural phenomena and cannot be avoided save by agitating, mixing, or stirring the body of stratified water (or fluid). Thus heat is first transferred by conduction which thereafter causes convection.[0016]
Thirdly, fluid flow in a pipe tube or duct (all referred to as conduit) has components of flow that are called boundary layer, laminar layer, and central or main flow. The boundary layer is that thin, immobile layer of fluid that clings to the wall of the conduit and through which conductive heat transfer occurs first. The laminar layer is a slow moving thin layer between the boundary and central flow and is where conduction also takes place and where convective flow begins.[0017]
Fourthly, in a vertical conduit, liquid flow is principally adjacent the conduit wall with no flow down the hollow center. Capillary action and air motion diverts the liquid to the wall where it clings, spreads, and flows downwards as a relatively thin falling film.[0018]
Fifthly, by adding protrusions to a conduit wall, heat transfer can be further improved due to the turbulent mixing of the three flow regions. Such turbulence inducing protrusions may take the form of dimples or ridges on the conduit wall.[0019]
The present invention prevents unwanted conductive heat transfer of recovered heat to a cold drainwater flow by adding an intermediate convection section between the drainwater and freshwater heat exchangers. The convection section is a tubular reservoir which encloses the drainwater heat exchanger, is filled once with water, and is encircled by the freshwater heat exchanger. Within the water-filled reservoir there is also at least one convection chamber made of an insulative material that fills with reservoir water. It/they holds a small but sufficient volume of reservoir water to completely submerge the drainwater heat exchanger. The convection chamber's opening is in its upper portion while its lower portion is leak-proof. The small volume of water contained in the convection chamber exchanges heat with the drainwater heat exchanger by direct thermal conduction. However since the convection chamber is open at the top and insulated all around, it can only exchange heat with the reservoir water by convection. Since the convection chamber is leak proof and has only an upper opening, heat from warmer drainwater drives an upward convection into the reservoir, thereby effecting the desired drainwater heat recovery. Cooled convection chamber water, from a cold drainwater flow, is made heavier and so remains immobile within the convection chamber isolating the drainwater heat exchanger and thereby preventing the surrounding warmer reservoir water (and freshwater coil) from losing its heat to the cold drainwater. Thus the objective of no-loss heat storage is achieved at low cost in both horizontal and vertical units.[0020]
The drainwater heat exchanger of the present invention generally comprises at least one straight section of drainpipe that uses thin film heat transfer and has a central heat transfer portion located within the water-filled reservoir. End portions extend out of the reservoir for connecting inline to a building's drainpipe. The diameter of the drainpipe heat exchanger depends on drainwater composition and flow. For use with toilet flows, the drainpipe is generally a minimum of 3 inches in diameter and in this application the drainwater heat exchanger would be that diameter, or larger, and generally a straight through tube. For applications where there is contained in the drainwater smaller solids than the toilet, the diameter may be reduced, there being no lower limit. In an application, for example, where the present invention is to be installed within the cabinet of a dishwasher, the drainpipe heat exchanger may be 1 or 2 inches in diameter or even less. It is also within the scope of the present invention to have other than a straight through drainwater heat exchanger where fouling is not a problem such as in a laundry washing application. Here the drainwater heat exchanger may be coiled or have several parallel straight tubes or be made of a twisted tube. As well, oval or rounded rectangle shapes provide larger surface area for horizontally flowing drainwater. Any shape may be used consistent with fabricating a suitable convection chamber to work with that shape. For lowest cost, the may be made from a thin plastic film extruded tube or tube welded from sheet film, and backed by a thin seamed-metal tube on its exterior. A double drainwater heat exchanger tube of thin plastic film could also be used for added security.[0021]
In the present invention the convection chamber is/are located within the reservoir and may be one or more in number. The convective opening is arranged such that a horizontal plane through the lowest point of the opening, lies at least marginally above the highest point of the that portion of the exposed drainwater heat exchanger wall served by the respective convection chamber. In this way, the entire drainwater heat exchanger is fully submerged in the water contained in the convection chamber(s), and, the convection chamber cannot overfill with cold water. A convection chamber may be made entirely of plastic or if made of metal (to act as a heat transfer fin) it must have an insulated exterior surface. A convection chamber should hold as small a volume of reservoir water as possible, much smaller than the combined volumes of the reservoir water plus that water filling the cold water heat exchanger tubing. This volume, however, must not be so small as to restrict convection speed. Fins attached to the drainwater heat exchanger outer wall may advantageously take up volume in the convection chamber, reducing water volume, and add heat transfer performance.[0022]
The convection chamber takes on two distinct shapes depending on whether the heat exchanger is to be used horizontally or vertically.[0023]
For the horizontal embodiment, the convection chamber may be a long, channel-shaped trough which may advantageously be made of metal such as copper and attached directly (i.e., soldered) to the bottom of a copper drainwater heat exchanger to enhance heat transfer. Several such metal channels may be nested to further enhance heat transfer. The outside of the outermost convection chamber channel is covered with an insulating skin. It is closed and sealed at the ends to ensure that when cooled (heavier) water is contained therein it does not leak into the warmer reservoir cooling same. Because drainpipes are necessarily sloped downwards for flow, the entire drainwater heat recovery device may also be sloped. However cold water is created up to the level of the highest point of thermal conduction from the drainwater heat exchanger. This level, the cold water line, must be entirely within the convection chamber. If designed for dead horizontal use but then sloped to match the building's drainpipe, the cold water would flow down to the low end of the convection chamber and continually overflow the walls of the convection chamber defeating the no heat-loss objective. Therefore the sloped drainwater heat exchanger may have spaced fins along its horizontal length that act as bulkheads or sealing partitions, dividing the convection chamber into short separate sections where the cold water level in each segment will remain within a minimum overall convection chamber volume. For this arrangement, the outer insulation layer will need to wrap around the top of the convection chamber and down the inside wall so that no conductive heat transfer can take place anywhere above the cold water line. Alternatively the convection chamber walls may merely be made higher (taller) to enclose horizontal pooling of any cold water in the convection chamber(s). This alternative however, adds unwanted volume to the convection chamber. Also for this arrangement, the outer insulation layer will need to wrap around the top of the convection chamber and down the inside wall, at least at the high end, so that conductive heat transfer cannot take place anywhere above the cold water line.[0024]
The drainwater heat exchanger may be of any shape suited to the task including round, oval, twisted tube, multiple parallel, and labyrinth, as long as a suitable convection chamber can be constructed to enclose same and not hold too much volume. The opening in the convection chamber may be designed to enhance fluid flow having, for example, it may have a nozzle-shaped slit with a gentle upward and outward flare to ensure rising convection currents are not slowed by edges.[0025]
For the vertical embodiment the convection chambers are generally several in number and take the form of tapered cups with holes in their bottoms for them to slip and seal to the drainpipe heat exchanger. These cups, being open at their tops, are arranged to slightly nest one into the next such that, no horizontal strata of reservoir water can contact any exposed wall of the drainwater heat exchanger. Sufficient numbers of nested cups are used such that they extend the length of the drainwater heat exchanger and are submerged in the reservoir water. A short, bottommost portion of the drainpipe heat exchanger may be left plain (no convection chamber) as the coldest water will naturally collect there and so heat transfer to a cold drainpipe will be minimal. This would be done mainly in the interests of ease of assembly. If a metal convection chamber is used to enhance heat transfer, then the outside of the convection chamber must be covered with an insulating skin to prevent conductive heat transfer through it's wall.[0026]
The reservoir of the present invention is a water-filled, generally tubular container of any cross-sectional shape suitable for enclosing the drainwater heat exchanger and having a volume for the required heat capacity, where, size and weight aside, the larger the volume the better. The reservoir need not be pressurized. Depending on whether the cold water heat exchanger is installed inside or outside of this reservoir, the reservoir may be made from a several different materials. If the cold water heat exchanger is wrapped about the exterior of the reservoir and high heat transfer rates are desirable with cost being a secondary consideration, then the reservoir may be made from a highly thermally conductive metal, such as copper. For similar performance at a lower cost, the reservoir may be made of thin plastic membrane such as vinyl or polyethylene film welded into a ‘bag’ shape. This bag would be supported against the weight of contained water by the exterior cold water heat exchanger coil. The reservoir is sealed by clamp means to the tube ends of the drainwater heat exchanger. If the cold water heat exchanger is to be installed within the reservoir then a thick walled plastic tube may be used for the reservoir. Various combinations of these materials may be used for the reservoir. For example a membrane bag with an exterior thin metal foil for enhanced heat transfer at moderate cost increase. A metal insert (i.e., a sheet of metal) within the reservoir will allow temperature to even out within the reservoir.[0027]
The cold water heat exchanger of the present invention may be submerged inside the reservoir or wrapped in conductive contact around the exterior of the reservoir. The tubing used can advantageously be as large a diameter as practical in order to hold more volume of water for more heat storage. Heat is better stored in the cold water coil as it is then instantly available for delivery to the water heater. Cold water tubing may also be of a plastic material (for lower cost) since there are often long periods of time (i.e., overnight) that pass between a drainwater heat recovery event and a hot water use event. Such plastic tubing may be readily extruded to have a square cross section to increase heat transfer surface area in contact with the reservoir wall. Long time periods overcome the poor heat transfer coefficient of plastic. In addition, in a preferred embodiment, both a metal and a plastic coil may be co-jointly used being plumbed together in series or parallel and wrapped about the exterior of the reservoir wall. This dual material cold water heat exchanger arrangement will allow both fast and slow heat transfer to be utilized at the best possible cost-performance ratio. The plastic tube (low cost) would be wrapped outside of the copper coil (expensive) so that the water in the copper coil would heat first and fastest and conduct heat to the plastic.[0028]
Moving now to a description of operation. Any hotter drainwater flowing at any time (from either continuous and batch hot water use) heats the water in the convection chamber(s) by conductive heat transfer. This makes that water more buoyant which causes it to naturally convect upwards out of the convection chamber and become heated reservoir water. The main reservoir water being less buoyant (heavier), naturally convects downwards into the convection chamber for heating. This convection continues for as long as there is a temperature differential between the drainpipe heat exchanger and the reservoir water. The main reservoir water therefore becomes warmer as it stores more and more recovered drainwater heat energy. The cold water heat exchanger and the water it contains, are, of course, heated at this same time by conductive heat transfer from the warm reservoir water. If and when colder drainwater flows, convection chamber water is cooled first, becoming less buoyant (heavier) than the surrounding warmer reservoir water. The cooled convection chamber water therefore remains within the convection chamber and convective heat transfer with the reservoir water ceases. This prevents stored heat in the reservoir from being transferred to cold drainwater thereby achieving the objective of one-way-only heat transfer. The entire drainwater heat recovery device may be enclosed in insulation and protective jacket.[0029]
The present invention finally solves the problem of drainwater heat recovery from a building's entire drainwater supply by providing no-loss heat storage in a simple, low cost design, and with widespread installation potential.[0030]
The present invention in another embodiment may also be used for water cooling (i.e., cooling drinking water) by inverting the device such that convection chamber(s) have downwards facing opening. In such an orientation, the hot drainwater would just fill the insulated convection chamber(s) with more buoyant heated water preventing convection and thereby prevent heating the reservoir water. When drainwater is colder, convection would be downwards cooling the reservoir water, as intended. This of course, would cool water flowing through the fresh water heat exchanger.[0031]
With one of each embodiment of the present invention installed in-series, drainwater heat recovery and drainwater fresh water cooling may both be accomplished.[0032]
In the present invention three walls of separation exist between drainwater and fresh water which ensures absolute safety from contamination of fresh water, (drainwater heat exchanger wall, reservoir wall, fresh water heat exchanger wall). In addition the no-pressurized reservoir adds even more safety.[0033]
Additional details. To reduce fouling of the drainwater heat exchanger and to increase rate of heat transfer, dimpling of the exterior of the drainpipe heat exchanger may be used as disclosed in this applicant's U.S. Pat. No. 5,736,059, mentioned above, where high velocity punches or projectiles (such as fired shot) are applied to at least a portion of the drainpipe heat exchanger. Masks prevent dimpling in the portions where the convection chamber seals to the drainpipe. Other enhancements can be devised to create turbulence, including: rolled ridges, twists, fins, bubbled air, and vibration, and ultrasonics.[0034]
The present invention may be used in various combinations such as: more than one unit plumbed in series, or in parallel, in series-parallel, and where vertical and horizontal embodiments are combined. In addition, one or more miniature systems may be integrated into the cabinetry of sinks or dish- and laundry washing machines and used with tankless or instantaneous water heaters.[0035]
Further, it should be remembered that all indoor plumbing fixtures are heated by ambient air and so even cold water used at the fixture is warmed as it flows over warm fixture and drainpipe surfaces. When the drainwater heat is recycled by the present heat exchanger invention, this warm drainwater can provide fresh warm water with no need for a traditional hot water supply. The pre-heated fresh water provided may be plumbed directly to the fixture's faucet, providing warm water at no energy cost, the heat being repeatedly recycled from the drainwater to the fresh water.[0036]
Moreover the reservoir of the present invention could be pressurized with fresh water, thus avoiding the cost for the second cold water heat exchanger. This heated water could then be used as feed water to a fixture, or, used for toilet flush where the heated water would reduce condensation on the exterior of the tank and resultant dripping onto the floor. This dripping is known to cause structural damage, and to support fungus/mould growth which results in dangerous airborne spores in the building.[0037]
In yet another embodiment, a thermostatically controlled low wattage heater may be provided within the reservoir to maintain a minimum temperature for use at the site.[0038]